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The role of family support on the effects of paramedic role overload on resilience, intention to leave and promotive voice

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posted on 2025-09-15, 23:32 authored by Hannah MeachamHannah Meacham, P Holland, Patricia Dina Pariona-CabreraPatricia Dina Pariona-Cabrera, Haiying Kang, TL Tham, Timothy BartramTimothy Bartram, Jillian CavanaghJillian Cavanagh
<p dir="ltr">Purpose: Paramedics have played a critical role in the health care system response to the COVID-19 pandemic as frontline responders. However, in comparison to other health care workers (i.e. nurses), less research has been conducted on how paramedic work has been undertaken and how they manage their resources in the context of high workloads. This study examines several factors that deplete paramedic resources as well as the importance of family support in buffering the effects of low levels of resilience that can impact paramedic intention to leave and promotive voice. </p><p dir="ltr">Design/methodology/approach: Data were collected from 648 paramedics employed by Ambulance Victoria, Australia, during the COVID-19 pandemic. We examine five hypotheses: (1) resilience mediates the relationship between role overload and intention to leave; (2) resilience mediates the relationship between role overload and promotive voice; (3) family support moderates the relationship between role overload and resilience; (4) family support moderates the indirect effect of role overload on intention to leave via resilience and (5) family support moderates the indirect effect of role overload on promotive voice via resilience. </p><p dir="ltr">Findings: We found that when family support was low, the impact of role overload on turnover intention via resilience was significant. When family support was low, the negative impact of role overload on promotive voice via resilience was significant. When family support was high, such a negative indirect effect was not significant in predicting employee promotive voice via resilience. </p><p dir="ltr">Practical implications: We suggest that organisations should focus human resource management (HRM) policies and practices on family-friendly initiatives to further enhance family support resources to benefit individuals, families and organisations. </p><p dir="ltr">Originality/value: Our findings demonstrate the importance of family support as a buffer to the negative effects of role overload on employee resilience and promotive voice. There is clear importance of the contextual elements of family support as a resource, and its absence may result in resource depletion and can act as a catalyst in a resource depletion spiral. This demonstrates the importance of organisations understanding and learning to utilise external resources to complement organisational and individual resources to reduce intention to leave and support promotive employee voice. We suggest that organisations should focus HRM policies and practices on family-friendly initiatives to further enhance family support resources to benefit individuals, families and organisations.</p>

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    DOI - Is published in DOI: 10.1108/PR-08-2023-0685
  3. 3.
    ISSN - Is published in 0048-3486 (Personnel Review)

Journal

Personnel Review

Volume

54

Issue

1

Start page

236

End page

255

Publisher

Emerald

Language

en

Copyright

© 2024 Emerald Publishing Limited

Notes

This author accepted manuscript is deposited under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC) licence. This means that anyone may distribute, adapt, and build upon the work for non-commercial purposes, subject to full attribution. If you wish to use this manuscript for commercial purposes, please contact permissions@emerald.com.